I dunno, Glen.  

You are talking to a man with an insulin pump.  I start to think VERY BADLY
if anything goes wrong with it. 

Nick 

-----Original Message-----
From: friam-boun...@redfish.com [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf
Of glen e. p. ropella
Sent: Monday, September 19, 2011 11:04 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Fwd: The Psychology Of Yogurt

Nicholas Thompson wrote circa 11-09-17 01:09 PM:
> We would never wonder why a better transistor would make the computing 
> better; why would we wonder why a better stomach would make the mind 
> work better.

I'm a bit amazed at this statement. 8^)  So much is packed into the word
"better" that it makes the statement incomprehensible to me.  Sure, under
one understanding of "better", a better transistor makes for better
computing (or a better stomach makes a better mind).  But there are so many
other understandings of "better" where that may not be the case that they
completely swamp the smaller set.

My point being that systemic organization is not as simple as that.  Not
only are complex systems nonlinear in the way their components'
behaviors generate the systemic behavior, but they are also nonlinear in the
way the components' purposes/requirements compose the system's
purpose/requirements.

We _can_ do this with transistors and computers because we _designed_
("engineered" is probably a better word) the damned things.  It's like my
knowledge of the Android phones vs. my knowledge of the iPhone.  The fact
that I can root around inside an Android phone makes hypotheses about its
inner workings easier to triage.  The iPhone ... not so much.

Take that reasoning to another layer and we have the _lack_ of ability to
triage hypotheses about the human body vs. the very competent ability to
triage hypotheses about the workings of a computer.

--
glen e. p. ropella, 971-222-9095, http://tempusdictum.com


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